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Comparative evaluation of freeze-dried and hot air-dried Spirulina Platensisextracts as green inhibitors for mild steel corrosion

Authors :
Seghiri, R.
Rbaa, M.
Rouifi, Z.
Moussaif, A.
Berdimurodov, E.
Demir, M.
Aliev, N.
Legrand, J.
Source :
Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly; October 2024, Vol. 63 Issue: 4 p1400-1414, 15p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

ABSTRACTSpirulina, a commercially farmed cyanobacteria, offers potential as a nontoxic corrosion inhibitor. However, traditional drying methods deteriorate its protective feature and this challenge must be overcome to enhance corrosive resistance. The present study compares the corrosive inhibitor performance of Spirulina extracts from freeze (SP1) and hot air drying (SP2). The electrochemical and microscopic techniques revealed that freeze-dried-derived Spirulina inhibited over 90% of corrosion through the chemisorption process where freeze-dried-derived Spirulina maximises the inhibitory compounds binding to steel. Polarisation measurements showed that SP1 provided higher inhibition efficiencies of over 93% at certain concentrations compared to around 88% for SP2. At the optimal concentration of 2 g/L, Rp values increased from 35.17 Ω/cm2(uninhibited) to 531.3 Ω/cm2for SP1 and 282.7 Ω/cm2for SP2. Negative ΔGadsvalues (−42.4 kJ/mol for SP2, −46.3 kJ/mol for SP1) and Langmuir isotherm fit indicated chemisorption-controlled adsorption. SEM/EDX showed SP1 and SP2 formed barrier layers inhibiting surface damage compared to blank steel. SP1 layer provided better protection. In short, through innovative applications of marine resources, greener corrosion management is enabled.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00084433 and 18791395
Volume :
63
Issue :
4
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67922861
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00084433.2023.2298066